A lot of administrators I talk to say the same thing, even if they say it a little differently: there’s less room for mistakes than there used to be.
For years, preparedness mostly lived in binders. Plans were reviewed once a year, drills were run, paperwork was filed. That approach still technically works, but it’s getting harder to rely on it alone.
Survey results move much faster now. Budgets are tighter. Emergencies don’t wait until plans feel finished. If anything, emergencies are showing up more often.
One of the most impactful shifts came in 2025 with updates to CMS survey processes and F-tag reporting. While the underlying Emergency Preparedness Rule didn’t change dramatically, how deficiencies are categorized and reported did.
Survey findings are being posted publicly much faster than they were in the past. Years ago, facilities often had time to address issues internally before results showed up online. That window has shrunk. Sometimes it’s barely there.
In real terms, that means:
Emergency preparedness findings don’t just sit in a report anymore. They become public, and fast.
Surveyors aren’t just checking whether an emergency plan exists. They’re paying closer attention to whether it actually makes sense.
Lately, that’s showing up in a few familiar places:
Generic plans still pass sometimes. But when surveyors start asking follow-up questions, those plans can fall apart quickly.
CMS often sets the baseline, but states are tightening things up too.
Across different regions, facilities are seeing:
Having the document isn’t enough anymore. Surveyors want to see that facilities understand their own risks and have taken reasonable steps to deal with them.
At the same time, most facilities are being asked to do more with less.
Operating budgets are tight. Labor is expensive. Capital approvals take longer. Emergency preparedness competes with daily operational needs, and it doesn’t always win.
That’s forcing a lot of administrators to rethink things:
Efficiency isn’t just a talking point anymore. It’s becoming necessary.
If recent patterns hold, 2026 is likely to bring more of what facilities are already dealing with:
Facilities that once felt “low risk” are now dealing with power outages, water issues, and supply chain delays. Even short disruptions can be very taxing on your staff.
Preparedness can’t be based on what used to happen. What used to be rare is starting to feel normal.
A few trends are already hard to ignore:
Facilities that wait for surveys to uncover problems are taking on more risk than they probably realize.
In this environment, self-assessment matters. Not because someone requires it, but because it’s often the only way to see gaps before someone else points them out.
Peak10’s Risk & Readiness Assessment Tool (RAT) was built to help senior care facilities spot issues that don’t always show up on paper:
It’s quick, practical, and free.
Emergency readiness in 2026 isn’t about predicting every possible scenario. It’s about being honest about where things could fail — and dealing with those areas before they do.